On Jan 02, Dwayne C . Litzenberger wrote: > Wrong. Much of English comes from French, German and Latin. Metre is > correct (ask any Englishman). *Americans* are the only ones who spell > things "the other way".
Metre is correct, but not for the reason that it's "the way everyone else does it". The spelling "metre" is specified by the SI measurement system. Incidentally, this means the American "gram" is correct while the English "gramme" is incorrect, at least when it comes to the SI measures. As a suffix to other words (program/programme), it's debatable. However, I would say that American spellings would be slightly more intuitive for non-native speakers. But English is so non-intuitive anyway it's splitting hairs ;-) For other words, neither spelling system is truly correct. Spelling of the English language was not standardized in any country until the 19th century; up until that point, spelling was highly fluid. The signers of the U.S. Declaration of Independence, for example, pledged their "sacred honour" because that's the way Jefferson spelled the word, not because (per se) they were English. Shakespeare spelled a lot of words in the current "American" spelling; sometimes he'd spell the same word different ways in the same play. Even today, there is no true arbiter of what is "proper" English (in any English-speaking country); cfr. France and Germany. However, anyone who uses a certain three-letter plural for "sock" should be killed on sight. ;-) Chris -- ============================================================================= | Chris Lawrence | Get Debian GNU/Linux CDROMs | | <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> | http://www.lordsutch.com/cds/ | | | | | Open Directory Editor | Visit the Lurker's Guide to Babylon 5: | | http://dmoz.org/ | <*> http://www.midwinter.com/lurk/ <*> | =============================================================================